Inframarginal Contributions to Development Economics.
The core of classical economic analysis represented by William Petty and Adam Smith concentrated on the field of development economics. This classical footing of the study of development is different from the neoclassical perspective in two important respects: (a) it focuses on division of labor as...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Singapore :
World Scientific Publishing Company,
2006.
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Colección: | Increasing returns and inframarginal economics.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface ; Part 1. Introduction ; Chapter 1. Returning to the Classical Tradition: The Relevance and Application of Inframarginal Analysis to Development Economics ; Part 2. The Origins of Inframarginal Applications to the Study of Economic Development.
- Chapter 2. The Marginal Cost Controversy Chapter 3. Economics and Biology: Specialization and Speciation ; Chapter 4. Externality ; Part 3. Development Strategies, Income Distribution, and Dual Structures; Chapter 5. Economic Development, International Trade, and Income Distribution; Chapter 6. Pursuit of Relative Utility and Division of Labor.
- Part 4. Urbanization Chapter 7. Development, Structural Changes and Urbanization; Chapter 8. An Equilibrium Model Endogenizing the Emergence of a Dual Structure between the Urban and Rural Sectors ; Chapter 9. Agglomeration Economies, Division of Labour and the Urban Land-Rent Escalation: A General Equilibrium Analysis of Urbanisation; Part 5. Entrepreneurship and the Firm.
- Chapter 10. Theory of the Firm and Structure of Residual Rights Chapter 11. The Theory of Irrelevance of the Size of the Firm ; Chapter 12. Specialization, Product Development, Evolution of the Institution of the Firm, and Economic Growth; Part 6. Endogenous Transaction Costs and Property Rights.
- Chapter 13. Endogenous Specialisation and Endogenous Principal-Agent Relationship Chapter 14. A Model Formalizing the Theory of Property Rights ; Chapter 15. Economy of Specialization and Diseconomy of Externalities ; Part 7. Investment, Endogenous Growth, and Social Experiments; Chapter 16. The Division of Labor, Investment and Capital.